EN BANC
[G.R. Nos. 104637-38. September 14, 2000]
SAN MIGUEL CORPORATION, NEPTUNIA CORPORATION LIMITED, ANDRES SORIANO III AND ANSCOR-HAGEDORN SECURITIES, INC., petitioners, vs. SANDIGANBAYAN (FIRST DIVISION), PHILIPPINE COCONUT PRODUCERS FEDERATION, INC. (COCOFED), MARIA CLARA L. LOBREGAT, BIENVENIDO MARQUEZ, JOSE R. ELEAZAR, JR., DOMINGO ESPINA, JOSE GOMEZ, CELESTINO SABATE, MANUEL DEL ROSARIO, JOSE MARTINEZ, JR., JOSE REYNALDO MORENTE AND ELADIO CHATTO, respondents.
[G.R.
No. 109797. September 14, 2000]
SAN MIGUEL CORPORATION, NEPTUNIA CORPORATION LIMITED, ANDRES
SORIANO III AND ANSCOR-HAGEDORN SECURITIES, INC., petitioners, vs. SANDIGANBAYAN
(FIRST DIVISION), PHILIPPINE COCONUT PRODUCERS FEDERATION, INC. (COCOFED),
MARIA CLARA L. LOBREGAT, BIENVENIDO MARQUEZ, JOSE R. ELEAZAR, JR., DOMINGO
ESPINA, JOSE GOMEZ, CELESTINO SABATE, MANUEL DEL ROSARIO, JOSE MARTINEZ, JR.,
JOSE REYNALDO MORENTE AND ELADIO CHATTO, respondents.
D E C I S I O N
PUNO, J.:
It appears that on March 26, 1986,
the Coconut Industry Investment Fund Holding Companies[1] ("CIIF" for brevity) sold 33,133,266 shares
of the outstanding capital stock of San Miguel Corporation to Andres Soriano
III of the SMC Group payable in four (4) installments.[2]
On April 1, 1986, Andres Soriano
III paid the initial P500 million to the UCPB as administrator of the
CIIF. The sale was transacted through
the stock exchange and the shares were registered in the name of
Anscor-Hagedorn Securities, Inc. (AHSI).
On April 7, 1986, the Presidential
Commission on Good Government (PCGG) then led by the former President of the
Senate, the Honorable Jovito R. Salonga, sequestered the shares of stock
subject of the sale.[3] Due to the sequestration, the SMC Group (hereinafter
referred to as the petitioners) suspended payment of the balance of the
purchase price of the subject stocks.
In retaliation, the UCPB Group rescinded the sale.
On June 2, 1986, UCPB and CIIF
Holding Companies went to court. They
filed a complaint with the Regional Trial Court of Makati against the
petitioners for confirmation of rescission of sale with damages.[4] On June 5, 1986, the petitioners assailed in this
Court the jurisdiction of the Makati
RTC on the ground that primary jurisdiction was vested with the PCGG since the
SMC shares were sequestered shares.[5] On August 10, 1988, we upheld the petitioners. We ordered, among others, the dismissal of
the rescission case filed in the Makati RTC without prejudice to the
ventilation of the parties' claims before the Sandiganbayan.[6]
The record shows that the
petitioners and the UCPB Group were able to thresh out their dispute
extra-judicially. In March 1990, they
signed a Compromise Agreement and Amicable Settlement.[7] Its pertinent provisions state:
"3.1. The sale of the shares covered by and corresponding to the first installment of the 1986 Stock Purchase Agreement consisting of Five Million SMC Shares is hereby recognized by the parties as valid and effective as of 1 April 1986. Accordingly, said shares and all stock and cash dividends declared thereon after 1 April 1986 shall pertain, and are hereby assigned, to SMC. x x x
3.2. The First Installment Shares shall revert to the SMC treasury for dispersal pursuant to the SMC Stock Dispersal Plan attached as Annex "A-1" hereof. The parties are aware that these First Installment Shares shall be sold to raise funds at the soonest possible time for the expansion program of SMC. x x x
3.3. The sale of the shares covered by and corresponding to the second,
third and fourth installments of the 1986 Stock Purchase Agreement is
hereby rescinded effective 1 April 1986 and deemed null and void, and of
no force and effect. Accordingly, all
stock and cash dividends declared after 1 April 1986 corresponding to
the second, third and fourth installments shall pertain to CIIF Holding
Corporations. xxx"[8](emphasis supplied)
They
likewise agreed to pay an "arbitration fee" of 5,500,000 SMC shares
composed of 3,858,831 “A” shares and 1,641,169 “B” shares to the PCGG to
be held in trust for the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program.[9]
On March 23, 1990, the petitioners
and the UCPB Group filed with the Sandiganbayan a Joint Petition for
Approval of the Compromise Agreement and Amicable Settlement. The petition was docketed as Civil Case
No. 0102.[10]
On March 29, 1990, the
Sandiganbayan motu proprio directed that copies of the Joint Petition be
furnished to E. Cojuangco, Jr., M. Lobregat and others who are
defendants in Civil Case No. 0033. The
same SMC shares are the subject of Civil Case No. 0033 and alleged as part of
the alleged ill-gotten wealth of former President Marcos and his
"cronies."[11]
On April 25, 1990, the Republic
of the Philippines, through the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG), opposed[12] the Compromise Agreement and Amicable Settlement. It contended that the involved coco-levy
funds, whether in the form of earnings or dividends therefrom, or in the form
of the value of liquidated corporate assets represented by all sequestered
shares (like the value of assets sold/mortgaged to finance the P500M first
installment), or in the form of cash, or, as in the case of subject
"Settlement," in the form of "proceeds" of sale or of
"payments" of certain alleged obligations are public funds. As public funds, the coco-levy funds, in any
form or transformation, are beyond or "outside the commerce," and
perforce not within the private disposition of private individuals.[13]
The reliefs prayed for by the
Solicitor General state:
"1. That the "Settlement" be stricken off the record or at most referred back to the PCGG for serious study and consideration. While the PCGG under its legal mandate (as sustained in G.R. No. 84895, "Republic v. Campos") in principle encourages settlement agreements on ill-gotten wealth to expedite recovery thereof for the benefit of the Government, the herein privately proposed "Settlement" subject of the petition contains private proposals of "utilization and management of" public funds that are prejudicial to the Government, without "full disclosures" as normally required by PCGG and over which in respect of declarant immunity may even be granted.
2. That this Petition be consolidated with, or treated as a premature motion or incident in Civil Case No. 0033, and brought by improper parties. To repeat, the plaintiff Republic through PCGG is not a party to what in effect will be a judicial compromise in Civil Case No. 0033. Nowhere does the "Settlement" mention that its terms are subject to the judicial outcome of this Civil Case No. 0033. It is to be emphasized that even in the "Pepsi-Cola Settlement" cited by the petitioners, the alleged loan payments therein to liquidate alleged obligations are subject in no uncertain terms to the final outcome of the main Civil Case No. 0033 pending before this Honorable Court,
'The concern of the Court in matters such as this has always been to see to it that the properties in sequestration would be well (and profitably, if possible) preserved either for the government, if the plaintiff proves the 'crony' and 'ill-gotten' character of the property, or for the defendants if not,'
considering that one of the reliefs prayed
for or one of causes of action in the Republic's Complaint in Civil Case No.
0033 is precisely for Accounting and/or Damages. In the instant "Settlement," the
"crony" and "ill-gotten character of the property" involved
is a matter of public record if not public notoriety. Plaintiff Republic need not prove the public character of the
coco-levy funds. This is a matter of
settled law and jurisprudence, a "given" fact, to quote the Honorable
Supreme Court."[14] (emphasis supplied)
On April 18, 1990, Mr.
Eduardo M. Cojuangco, Jr. moved to
intervene alleging legal interest in the approval or disapproval of the
Compromise Agreement and Amicable Settlement.[15]
On May 24, 1990, the Philippine
Coconut Producers' Federation, Inc. (COCOFED), et al.[16] filed an "Omnibus Class Action Motion for
Leave to Intervene and to Admit:
(1) Opposition-in-Intervention, and (2) Compulsory
Counter-Petition and Counterclaim for Damages."[17] They alleged that they are the ultimate beneficial
owners of the SMC shares subject of the Compromise Agreement.
On June 18, 1990, the PCGG filed
its Manifestation[18] attaching a copy of the Resolution[19] of the Commission en banc dated June 15, 1990. PCGG joined the Solicitor General in praying
that the Joint Petition for Approval of Compromise Agreement should be treated
as an incident of Case No. 0033.[20] PCGG, however, interposed no objection to the
implementation of the Compromise Agreement subject to the incorporation of the
following provisions:
"1. As stated in the COMPROMISE, the 5 million SMC shares (now 26,450,000) paid for by the P500 million first installment shall be delivered to SMC, kept in treasury, and sold as soon as feasible in accordance with a plan to be agreed upon by the Commission and SMC; provided, that SMC shall not unreasonably withhold its consent to a sales plan approved by PCGG.
The P500 million paid by SMC as first installment shall be accounted for by UCPB and the CIIF companies to the extent respectively received by them, and any portion thereof in excess of the usual business needs of the possessor shall be delivered by it to the Commission, to be held in escrow for the ultimate owner.
2. On Delivery Date, the stock certificates for the balance of the SHARES in the name of the 14 holding companies shall be delivered to PCGG and deposited with the Central Bank for safekeeping to await their sale in accordance with the plan of dispersal that PCGG and UCPB shall agree to establish for them. As soon as practicable, but with proper account of market conditions, all those shares shall be sold, and the proceeds thereof disposed as provided below. UCPB shall not unreasonably withhold its consent to a sales plan approved by PCGG in accordance with this paragraph.
3. So much of the proceeds of the sale as may be necessary shall be used a) to finance the obligations of the CIIF Companies under the COMPROMISE, and b) to liquidate the obligations of the CIIF Companies to UCPB for the purchase price of the SHARES. The balance shall be kept by the PCGG in escrow to await final judicial determination of the ownership of the various coconut-related companies and of all the other assets involved here. The cash dividends that have been declared on the SHARES may be applied for the above purposes before proceeds from the sale of shares are realized. The balance of such cash dividends shall be held in escrow in the same manner as the sales proceeds.
4. All SHARES shall continue to be sequestered even beyond Delivery Date. Sequestration on them shall be lifted as they are sold consequent to approval of the sale by the Sandiganbayan, and in accordance with the dispersal plan approved by the Commission. All of the SHARES that are unsold will continue to be voted by PCGG while still unsold.
5. The consent of PCGG to
the transfer of the sequestered shares of stock in accordance with the
COMPROMISE, and to the lifting of the sequestration thereon to permit such
transfer, shall be effective only when approved by the Sandiganbayan. The Commission makes no determination of the
legal rights of the parties as against each other. The consent it gives here conforms to its duty to care for the
sequestered assets, and to its purpose to prevent the repetition of the
national plunder. It is not to be
construed as indicating any recognition of the legality or sufficiency of any
act of any of the parties."[21]
The petitioners and the UCPB Group
filed their Joint Manifestation[22] accepting the conditions imposed by PCGG. They also opposed the intervention of
COCOFED, et al.
On October 12, 1990, the
petitioners moved for early resolution of the Joint Petition for Approval of
the Compromise Agreement and Amicable Settlement together with its pending
incidents.[23]
On October 16, 1990, the
Sandiganbayan issued an Order[24] integrating Case No. 0102 as an incident of Civil
Case No. 0033, thus:
"Considering the interest expressed by the different parties
in Civil Case No. 0033, and considering further that the subject matter of the
amicable settlement which is presented before this Court for approval, the
Court has deemed it best that Civil Case No. 0102 be integrated with, and be
made an incident to, Civil Case No. 0033. xxx"[25]
The
petitioners did not challenge the Order.
In its Manifestation[26] dated November 19, 1990, the Solicitor General
maintained his Opposition to the Compromise Agreement and Amicable Settlement.
On November 23, 1990,
Sandiganbayan deferred consideration of the Compromise Agreement "until
the parties thereto take the initiative to restore the same in the Court's
calendar."[27] On February 5, 1991, it also deferred resolution of
Cojuangco's Motion to Intervene.
On February 21, 1991, the UCPB
Group filed a Motion to set the Joint Petition for hearing.[28] In its Order dated February 27, 1991, the Sandiganbayan
required the parties to comment on the propriety of the said court's continuing
to entertain the Compromise Agreement.[29] In compliance with the said Order, the petitioners
filed its Manifestation dated March 15, 1991 expressly recognizing the
jurisdiction of the Sandiganbayan to rule on the petition for the approval of
the compromise agreement.31
On June 3, 1991, the Sandiganbayan
issued the following Resolution:31
"It appearing that the sequestered character of the shares of
stock subject of the instant petition for the approval of the compromise agreement,
which are shares of stock in the San Miguel Corporation in the name of the CIIF
Corporations, is independent of the transaction involving the contracting
parties in the Compromise Agreement between what may be labeled as the
"SMC Group" and the "UCPB Group," and it appearing further
that the said sequestered SMC shares of stock have not been physically seized
nor taken over by the PCGG, so much so that the reversions contemplated in said
Compromise Agreement are without prejudice to the perpetuation of the
sequestration thereon, until such time as a judgment might be rendered on said
sequestration (which issue is not before this Court as (sic) this time), and it
appearing finally that the PCGG has not interposed any objection to the
contractual resolution of the problems confronting the "SMC Group"
and the "UCPB Group" to the extent that the sequestered character of
the shares in question is not affected, this Court will await the pleasure
of the Presidential Commission on Good Government before consideration of the
Compromise Agreement is reinstated in the Court's calendar.
While this is, in effect, a denial of the "UCPB
Group's" Motion to set consideration of the Compromise Agreement herein,
this denial is without prejudice to a reiteration of the motion or any other
action by the parties should developments hereafter justify the same."
On July 4, 1991, the petitioners
and the UCPB Group filed a Joint Manifestation that they have implemented
the Compromise Agreement and Amicable Settlement with the conditions set by the
PCGG and accordingly, withdrew their Joint Petition.32 They informed that they have executed the following
corporate acts:
"a. On instructions of the SMC Group, the certificates of stock registered in the name of Anscor-Hagedorn Securities, Inc. (AHSI) representing 175,274,960 SMC shares were surrendered to the SMC corporate secretary.
b. The said SMC shares were reissued and registered in the record books of SMC in the following manner:
i) Certificates for 25,450,000 SMC shares were registered in the name of SMC, as treasury;
ii) Certificates for 144,324,960 SMC shares were registered in the name of the CIIF Holding Companies;
iii) Certificates for 5,500,000 SMC shares were registered in the name of the PCGG.
c. The UCPB Group has delivered to the SMC Group the amount of P500,000,000.00 in full payment of the UCPB preferred shares.
d. The SMC Group delivered
to the UCPB Group the amount of P481,628,055.99 representing accumulated
dividends (from April 1, 1986) on the shares reverted to the CIIF Holding
Companies."33
The PCGG manifested that it has no
objection to the action taken by the petitioners and the UCPB Group.34 COCOFED, et al. and Cojuangco, Jr. filed
their respective motions,35 both dated July 4, 1991 to nullify the implementation
of the compromise agreement.
Acting on the Joint Manifestation
of Implementation of Compromise Agreement and of Withdrawal of Petition, the
Sandiganbayan on July 5, 1991 noted the same "with the observation
that the PCGG, the UCPB Group and the SMC Group shall always act with due
regard to the sequestered character of the shares of stock involved herein
as well as the fruits thereof, more particularly to prevent the loss or
dissipation of their value" and "without prejudice to whatever
might be the resolution of this Court on the Motion to Nullify the Compromise
Agreement filed by Eduardo Cojuangco, Jr."36
On July 8, 1991, the Sandiganbayan
issued two (2) Orders. The first was to
hear the defendants in Civil Case No. 0033 on the matter of the Compromise
Agreement whether under Civil Case No. 0102 or as an incident to Civil Case No.
0033.37 The second required the petitioners and the UCPB
Group as well as PCGG to formally state in writing the different holders of the
SMC shares subject of the compromise agreement. The Sandiganbayan further ordered PCGG to indicate on the face of
the subject shares their sequestered character.38
On July 16, 1991, petitioners
filed their Manifestation where they declared that Stock Certificate Nos. A
0004129 and A 0015556 representing 25,450,000 shares were issued in the name of
SMC as treasury stocks.39
On July 23, 1991, the
Sandiganbayan noted the Manifestations of the PCGG, the petitioners and the
UCPB group that the certificates of stock for the subject SMC shares which are
intended to form part of the corporation's treasury shares have been marked
"sequestered" by SMC and are in the custody of the PCGG.40
On August 5, 1991, the
Sandiganbayan issued an order requiring SMC to deliver the certificates of stock
representing the subject matter of the Compromise Agreement to the PCGG in view
of the oral manifestations of Commissioner Maceren seeking clarification of
portions of Sandiganbayan's July 23, 1991 Resolution.41
On August 9, 1991, the UCPB Group
filed a Motion to Allow it to Utilize Dividends on SMC shares for the payment
of the loans of CIIF Companies to UCPB.42 The motion was granted on September 2, 1991.43
On August 15, 1991, COCOFED, et
al. filed their Urgent Motion to Compel Surrender of the Cash Dividends
pertaining to (a) the 4.5 million SMC shares allegedly delivered to PCGG
in trust for the Comprehensive
Agrarian Reform Program and (b) the SMC
shares allegedly delivered to SMC as treasury shares.44
On August 22, 1991, petitioners
filed a Manifestation and Motion stating that the SMC shares have reverted to
the SMC treasury as treasury shares and are not entitled to dividends.45
On October 1, 1991, the
Sandiganbayan issued a Resolution allowing COCOFED, et al. to intervene.46 On March 30,
1992, it denied the separate motions for reconsideration filed by the
petitioners and the UCPB Group.47
On October 25, 1991, the Sandiganbayan
issued another Resolution requiring SMC to deliver the 25.45 million SMC
treasury shares to the PCGG.48 On March
18, 1992, it denied petitioners' Motion for Reconsideration and further ordered
SMC to pay dividends on the said treasury shares and to deliver them to the
PCGG.49
On April 13, 1992, petitioners
filed a Motion to Dismiss Intervention and/or Motion for Clarification with Ad
Cautelam Motion to Suspend Time.50 The
motion was denied in the Sandiganbayan's Resolution dated March 17, 1993.51
Before this Court now are two (2)
consolidated petitions for certiorari under Rule 65 of the Rules of
Court filed by petitioners San Miguel Corporation, Neptunia Corporation
Limited, Andres Soriano III and Anscor-Hagedorn Securities, Inc. They seek to annul the following resolutions
of the Sandiganbayan:
In G.R. No. 104637-38:
1. The Resolution dated October 25,
1991 reiterating52 that all Certificates of Stock representing
sequestered shares in the SMC be physically deposited with the PCGG and
requiring SMC to pay the cash dividends due or actually earned by the
said shares and deliver them to PCGG;53
2.
The Resolution dated March 18, 199254 requiring
SMC to deliver to the PCGG the 25.45 million shares as well as the cash and/or
stock dividends which have accrued thereto from March 26, 1986 to date and
which might have further accrued thereto had not said shares of stock been
declared treasury shares.55
In G.R. No. 109797:
1. The Resolution dated September 30, 1991 allowing COCOFED
and other private respondents to intervene in Case No. 0102 and
admitting their Counter-Petition;56
2. The Resolution dated March 27, 1992 denying the motions
of petitioners and the UCPB Group for reconsideration of the Resolution dated
September 30, 1991; and57
3. The Resolution dated March 17, 1993 denying petitioners'
motion to dismiss the Counter-Petition filed by COCOFED, et al.58
Petitioners contend:
In G.R. No. 104637-38:
"GROUNDS FOR
CERTIORARI
The questioned orders of the Sandiganbayan were issued without or in excess of its jurisdiction, and with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack of jurisdiction. They should be set aside as null and void.
A
The questioned orders would deprive SMC of property already paid for. They unduly protect the claimants of sequestered companies, at the expense of SMC.
B
The Sandiganbayan over-reached its jurisdiction in issuing the questioned orders.
1. The fact of sequestration, by itself, does not mean that the possessor of the sequestered assets must be dispossessed thereof at all costs. In the present case, there are weighty reasons why the treasury shares and any "dividends" thereon should remain with SMC.
2. The purported issue of ownership does not justify the dispossession of SMC of these shares.
C
The PCGG is the entity primarily charged with the duty and responsibility of preserving sequestered assets. Absent any showing that the PCGG betrayed this duty when it allowed SMC to keep the shares already paid for in treasury, the Sandiganbayan has no jurisdiction to over-rule the PCGG's judgment.
D
The questioned orders will foment litigation, in violation of the clear policy of the law that compromise is encouraged.
E
The sequestered (sic) assets threaten and put the sequestered assets at risk.
F
The Sandiganbayan
gravely abused its discretion when it treated the contracting parties to the
compromise agreement differently."59
In G. R. No. 109797:
"GROUNDS TO GRANT
PETITION
The Sandiganbayan acted without or in excess of jurisdiction or with grave abuse of discretion in issuing the questioned Resolutions in that:
I
Civil Case No. 0102 has been withdrawn. COCOFED, et al. cannot intervene in a withdrawn case.
II
The Sandiganbayan's motu proprio consolidation of Case 102 with Case 33 did not make the SMC Group parties to Case 33. It did not result in a merger of the two cases which preserved their separate identity.
III
By their own allegations, COCOFED, et al. have no cause of action.
1. COCOFED, et al. are not real parties in interest. They deny the Sandiganbayan's basis for finding that they are real parties in interest, i.e., that the SMC shares were acquired with coco-levy funds.
2. COCOFED, et al. are estopped from claiming to act for the UCPB Group.
IV
COCOFED, et al. are bound by the business judgment of the UCPB Group that the compromise is to the best interest of the UCPB Group.
V
In violation of the public policy that frowns on litigation and encourages fair compromise, the questioned resolutions foment litigation on issues settled by the compromise.
VI
COCOFED, et al. paid no docket fees for the
counter-petition. The Sandiganbayan
acquired no jurisdiction over the counter-petition."60
Vis-à-vis
these arguments, private respondents COCOFED, et al. contend:
In G.R. No. 104637-38:
I. That the Sandiganbayan has not yet resolved the matter of the compromise agreement. By insisting that it has implemented the compromise agreement and thus need not turn over the SMC shares corresponding to the P500 million first installment and the dividends thereon to the PCGG, the SMC Group is preempting the Sandiganbayan.
II. The Order of the Sandiganbayan to turn over the SMC shares corresponding to the P500 million first installment and the dividends thereon is proper because the SMC Group is not entitled thereto, having forfeited the first installment as liquidated damages for its refusal and failure to make subsequent installment payments.
III. At any rate, the transformation of the SMC shares into treasury shares is but part and parcel of the compromise agreement which has not yet been approved. Thus, it is premature for the SMC Group to treat these shares as such and to refuse to turn over the same as well as the accrued dividends thereon to the PCGG, as ordered by the Sandiganbayan. Moreover, the transformation is extremely disadvantageous to the CIIF Companies.
IV. The PCGG appointed directors of UCPB, the CIIF Companies, and SMC cannot enter into a compromise agreement which is tantamount to a disposition or dissipation of sequestered assets. Moreover, the PCGG is not entitled to any arbitration fee.
V. While the law encourages amicable settlements, the law likewise provides that any compromise should not only be legal but must also be fair. In this case, the proposed compromise is contrary to law and grossly disadvantageous to the CIIF Companies, UCPB and the coconut farmers/producers.
VI. The perceived danger of risk on the sequestered assets is purely speculative and is not supported by adequate proof. Moreover, the SMC shares are sufficient to cover the losses which may be sustained in pursuing the recovery of the SMC shares.
VII. The
CIIF Companies, being the disputed owners of the SMC shares, are entitled to
have the dividends on the SMC shares applied to its indebtedness to UCPB. On the other hand, until the question of
which entity is entitled thereto is settled, the SMC shares corresponding to
the P500 million first installment and the dividends thereon should be turned
over to the PCGG.61
and in G.R. No. 109797:
I. Civil Case No. 0102 may not be withdrawn sans the approval of the Sandiganbayan. Further, the filing by COCFED, et al. of the Intervention was in accordance with the ruling in Soriano III case which vests on COCOFED, et al. the right to ventilate its claims over the SMC shares.
II. The COCOFED case settled with finality that COCOFED, et al. are real parties in interest to the coconut levy funds as well as the corporations organized and investments acquired or funded from out of the coconut levy funds.
III. Where the business judgment is unsound and violative of law or public policy, affected persons may question such decision.
IV. The admission of the intervention is consistent with the ruling laid down in the Soriano III case.
V. The intervention is in the
nature of an Answer with Compulsory Counterclaim. As such, the Sandiganbayan acquired jurisdiction despite non-payment of docket fees.62
We stress at the outset that the
instant petitions were brought to us through a special civil action of certiorari
under Rule 65 of the Rules of Court to annul and set aside the above mentioned
Sandiganbayan resolutions for having been allegedly issued without or in excess
of jurisdiction and with grave abuse of discretion. To justify the issuance of the writ of certiorari, the
abuse of discretion must be grave, as when the power is exercised in an
arbitrary or despotic manner by reason of passion or personal hostility, and it
must be so patent as to amount to an evasion of positive duty or to a virtual
refusal to perform the duty enjoined, or to act at all, in contemplation of
law, as to be equivalent to having acted without jurisdiction.63 We shall now use
this unyielding yardstick.
RE:
ISSUE OF DELIVERY OF CERTIFICATES OF STOCK OF SMC SHARES AND THE DIVIDENDS THEREON TO THE PCGG IN G.R. NO. 104637-38
We find no grave abuse of
discretion on the part of Sandiganbayan when it ordered the petitioners to
deliver the treasury shares to PCGG and pay their corresponding dividends for
the following reasons:
First. The cases at
bar do not merely involve a compromise agreement dealing with private
interest. The Compromise Agreement
here involves sequestered shares of stock now worth more than nine
(9) billions of pesos, per estimate given by COCOFED.64 Their ownership
is still under litigation. It is not
yet known whether the shares are part of the alleged ill-gotten wealth of
former President Marcos and his "cronies." Any Compromise Agreement
concerning these sequestered shares falls within the unquestionable
jurisdiction of and has to be approved by the Sandiganbayan. The parties themselves recognized this
jurisdiction. In the Compromise Agreement
itself, the petitioners and the UCPB Group expressly acknowledged the
need to obtain the approval by the Sandiganbayan of its terms and conditions,
thus:
“5. Unless extended by mutual
agreement of the parties, the 'Delivery Date' shall be on the 10th Day from and
after receipt by any party of the notice of approval of this Compromise
Agreement and Amicable Settlement by the Sandiganbayan. Upon receipt of such notice, all other
parties shall be immediately informed.”65 (emphasis supplied)
The PCGG
Resolution of June 15, 1990 also imposed the approval of the Sandiganbayan
as a condition sine qua non for the transfer of these sequestered shares
of stock, viz:
"4. All SHARES shall continue to be sequestered even beyond Delivery Date. Sequestration on them shall be lifted as they are sold consequent to approval of the sale by the Sandiganbayan, and in accordance with the dispersal plan approved by the Commission. All of the SHARES that are unsold will continue to be voted by PCGG while still unsold.
5. The consent of PCGG to the
transfer of the sequestered shares of stock in accordance with the COMPROMISE,
and to the lifting of the sequestration thereon to permit such transfer, shall
be effective only when approved by the Sandiganbayan. The Commission makes no determination of the
legal rights of the parties as against each other. The consent it gives here conforms to its duty to care for the
sequestered assets, and to its purpose to prevent the repetition of the
national plunder. It is not to be
construed as indicating any recognition of the legality or sufficiency of any
act of any of the parties."66 (emphasis supplied)
Thus, the petitioners
voluntarily submitted to the jurisdiction of the Sandiganbayan by asking
for the approval of the said Compromise
Agreement. They stated in their
Manifestation dated March 15, 199167 that:
"1. The Compromise Agreement subject matter of this petition categorically states that `(a)ll the terms of th(e) Agreement are subject to approval by the Presidential Commission on Good Government (PCGG) as may be required by Executive Orders numbered 1, 2, 14 and 14-A. (T)he Agreement and the PCGG approval thereof shall be submitted to the Sandiganbayan.’ x x x
PCGG has consented to the Compromise Agreement. But its consent is 'effective only when
approved by the Sandiganbayan' (PCGG Resolution dated 15 June 1990, In Re:
Compromise Agreement between San Miguel Corporation, et al. and United Coconut
Planters Bank, et al.). Petitioners
accepted this condition, and incorporated by reference such condition as an
integral part of the Compromise Agreement."68
(emphasis
supplied)
In fine,
the jurisdiction of the Sandiganbayan to pass upon the parties’
Compromise Agreement is beyond dispute.
Second. Given its
undisputed jurisdiction, the Sandiganbayan ordered that the treasury shares
should be delivered to PCGG and that their dividends should be paid pending
determination of their real ownership which is the key to the
question whether they are part of the alleged ill-gotten wealth of former
President Marcos and his "cronies."
We cannot condemn and annul this
order as capricious. In the exercise of
its discretion, the Sandiganbayan can require a party-litigant to
deliver a sequestered property to the PCGG.
We held in Baseco vs. PCGG69 that "the
power of the PCGG to sequester property claimed to be 'ill-gotten' means
to place or cause to be placed under its possession or control said property,
or any building or office wherein any such property and any records pertaining
thereto may be found, including 'business enterprises and entities,' - - - for
the purpose of preventing the destruction, concealment or dissipation of, and
otherwise conserving and preserving the same - - - until it can be
determined, through appropriate judicial proceedings, whether the property was
in truth 'ill-gotten,' i.e. acquired through or as a result of improper or
illegal use or the conversion of funds belonging to the government or any of
its branches, instrumentalities, enterprises, banks or financial institutions,
or by taking undue advantage of official position, authority, relationship,
connection or influence, resulting in unjust enrichment of the ostensible owner
and grave damage and prejudice to the State."70
The order of the Sandiganbayan
regarding the subject treasury shares is merely preservative in nature. When the petitioners and UCPB Group filed
their Joint Manifestation of Implementation of the Compromise Agreement and of
Withdrawal of Petition, the Sandiganbayan cautioned that "the PCGG,
the UCPB and the SMC Group shall always act with due regard to the
sequestered character of the shares of stock involved as well as the fruits
thereof, more particularly to prevent the loss or dissipation of their value."71 The caution was wisely given in view of the many
contested provisions of the Compromise Agreement. For one, the Sandiganbayan observed that the conversion of the
SMC shares to treasury shares will result in a change in the status of
the sequestered shares in that:
1. When the SMC converts these common shares to treasury stock, it
is converting those outstanding shares into the corporation's property for
which reason treasury shares do not earn dividends.
2. The retained dividends which would have accrued to those shares if converted to treasury would go into the corporation and enhance the corporation as a whole. The enhancement to the specific sequestered shares, however, would be only to the extent aliquot in relation to all the other outstanding SMC shares.
3.
By converting the 26.45 million shares of stock into treasury shares,
the SMC has altered not only the voting power of those shares of
stock since treasury shares do not vote, but the SMC will have actually
enhanced the voting strength of the other outstanding shares of stock to the
extent that these 26.45 million shares no longer vote.72
These significant changes in the
character of the SMC shares cannot be denied.
In Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Manning,73 we explained the limited nature of treasury shares,
thus:
"Although authorities may differ on the exact legal and
accounting status of the so-called 'treasury shares,' they are more or less in
agreement that treasury shares are stocks issued and fully paid for and
re-acquired by the corporation either by purchase, donation, forfeiture or
other means. Treasury shares are therefore issued shares, but being in the
treasury they do not have the status of outstanding shares. Consequently,
although a treasury share, not having been retired by the corporation
re-acquiring it, may be re-issued or sold again, such share, as long as it
is held by the corporation as a treasury share, participates neither in
dividends, because dividends cannot be declared by the corporation to itself,
nor in the meetings of the corporation as voting stock, for otherwise equal
distribution of voting powers among stockholders will be effectively lost and
the directors will be able to perpetuate their control of the corporation,
though it still represents a paid-for interest in the property of the
corporation. The foregoing essential features of a treasury stock are lacking
in the questioned shares..."74 (emphasis
supplied)
For
another, the payment to the PCGG of an arbitration fee in the form of
5,500,000 of SMC shares75 is denounced as illegal, shocking and unconscionable.76 COCOFED, et al.
have assailed the legal right of PCGG to act as arbiter as well as the fairness
of its acts as arbiter. COCOFED, et al.
estimate that the value of the SMC shares given to PCGG as arbitration fee
which allegedly is not deserved, can run to P1,966,635,000.00.77 This is a
serious allegation and the Sandiganbayan cannot be charged with grave abuse of
discretion when it ordered that SMC should be temporarily dispossessed
of the subject treasury shares and that SMC should pay their dividends while
the Compromise Agreement involving them is still under question.
Petitioners cannot rely on the
case of First Phil. Holdings Corp. vs. Sandiganbayan78 to
justify their insistence that the P500 million payment made by Soriano III
should be validated. They contend that the rules encouraging
amicable settlement in civil cases should apply to cases involving sequestered
properties.79 In First
Phil. Holdings, this Court gave due course to the petition and ordered the
Sandiganbayan to approve the PCGG Resolution lifting the sequestration of
MERALCO shares. We noted that the
Republic of the Philippines has agreed to settle the controversy and the
agreement will not in any way prejudice the rights of third persons.
In the cases at bar, the record is
clear that the Republic of the Philippines, through the Office of the
Solicitor General, vigorously opposed the Compromise Agreement on legal
and moral grounds. COCOFED, et al. also
opposed and contend that the conversion of the SMC shares into treasury shares
is highly prejudicial to the interests of the coconut farmers. It cannot be gainsaid that if it is later
proved that SMC is not the lawful owner of the shares in question, what the
adjudged lawful owner will receive are treasury shares with diminished
value. The impugned order of the Sandiganbayan was issued to avoid this
mischief.
Petitioners also argue that the
Sandiganbayan gravely abused its discretion when it treated the contracting
parties to the Compromise Agreement differently.80 They argue that
it should not have allowed the dividend income of the sequestered shares in the
name of the CIIF Holding Companies to be applied to their indebtedness to the
UCPB. Again, we do not agree for the
order of the Sandiganbayan is consistent with the need to preserve and enhance
the value of the sequestered assets. We
quote its explanation:
"The application of the dividend income of the CIIF-owned SMC shares (which remain sequestered) to the debts of these CIIF companies in favor of the UCPB was meritorious on its own account.
The CIIF companies remain sequestered companies; the shares of stock in these companies and in the UCPB remain sequestered. If the UCPB shares and the CIIF companies (and, therefore, their assets and properties) are adjudged to have been 'ill-gotten' and 'crony-owned,' then all the sequestered properties, including the SMC shares and the resulting dividends will go to the government; otherwise, the CIIF companies will go to their registered stockholders, i.e., allegedly the coconut farmers, and the debts of the CIIF companies to the UCPB will have been duly paid or diminished. The period of sequestration will not have been unduly prejudicial to these corporations or to the coconut farmers.
Furthermore, if the debts of the CIIF companies to the UCPB had remained unpaid or unserviced at all, the bank itself (which is also heavily sequestered) would also suffer since it would, according to the UCPB, be violating the instructions of the Monetary Board (MB) thereon (p. 546, Record III). Compliance with the MB's instructions would save the UCPB from punitive action from the Central Bank.
The release of the dividends in this case would, therefore, protect the contingent rights of the coconut farmers as well as of the Republic in the UCPB itself. After all, nobody else is in contention for the benefits resulting from the payment of the debts of the CIIF companies except for the Government by reason of the sequestrations imposed and the registered stockholders thereof. Nobody else would suffer the consequences if the SMC shares owned by the CIIF companies were seized by the UCPB and/or the UCPB became impaired should the heavy debts of the CIIF companies not be serviced or partially paid.
2. On the other hand, the SMC Group has not justified its desire to retain the custody of the 25.45 million sequestered shares of stock, which it had converted to Treasury Shares despite sequestration, and to retain the dividends due thereon, on its own merits.
The SMC Group's primary justification for non-compliance with the Resolution of this Court requiring it to turn over the certificates of stock for the 25.45 million sequestered shares as well as the cash dividends already accrued thereon is the fact that the shares of stock have allegedly now become Treasury Shares.
The SMC Group, however, forgets two things:
'(a) Under the Corporation Code 'Treasury shares are shares of stock which have been issued and fully paid for, but subsequently reacquired by, the issuing corporation by purchase, redemption, donation or through some lawful means . . .' (Sec. 9, B.P. Blg. 68, Corporation Code). These 26.45 million shares of stock or any portion thereof can, therefore, become Treasury Shares, i.e., property of the San Miguel Corporation, only if the sale between the UCPB Group and the SMC Group is allowed; otherwise these shares cannot even begin to be deemed to have been 're-acquired by the issuing corporation,' i.e., the San Miguel Corporation;
(b) Even then, under the AGREEMENT between the UCPB Group and the SMC Group on March 26, 1986 for the sale of 33.1 million shares of SMC, the buyers were not only the San Miguel Corporation but also Andres Soriano, III, the Neptunia Corporation Limited of Hongkong and the Anscor-Hagedorn Securities, Inc. Under the letter of the PCGG Commissioner Ramon Diaz dated May 19, 1986 (item No. 6, supra), the Corporate Secretary of the San Miguel Corporation was forbidden from recording the transfer, conveyance, and encumbrance of these shares without the PCGG's approval. This was by virtue of the PCGG's powers under Sec. 2 of E.O. No. 2.'
Unless, therefore, the right of Neptunia, Andres Soriano, III and the Anscor-Hagedorn Securities, Inc. to these 26.45 million shares shall have been transferred to the SMC, the SMC cannot be deemed to have 'reacquired' these shares. They would remain co-owned by all four (4) entities.
The SMC Group's claim, therefore, that these 26.45 million shares are now Treasury Shares is unfounded.
But even if, indeed, these shares are treasury shares, they remain sequestered so that any movement of these shares cannot be of any permanent character that will alter their being sequestered shares and, therefore, in 'custodia legis,' that is to say, under the control and disposition of this Court.
It must finally be said that the conversion of the 26.45 (or 25.45) million shares by the SMC Group into Treasury Shares is of the SMC Group's own making and the SMC Group cannot perform acts that will, by its own say-so, take property away from 'custodia legis.'
The position taken by the SMC Group here is self-serving and
unacceptable. It is also contrary to
jurisprudence."81
The claim of petitioners to
fairness hardly impresses. It is
planted on the assumption that their purchase of the subject shares is above
board. The assumption begs the question
for the Sandiganbayan has yet to decide the real ownership of the subject
shares, i.e., whether or not they are part of the alleged illegal wealth of
former President Marcos and his "cronies." Nor have petitioners shown
that they will suffer a legal prejudice if they deliver the shares and the
dividends thereon to the PCGG. It need
not be stressed that in the event the petitioners are found to be the lawful
owners of these shares, they will be awarded the cash and stock dividends which
have accrued thereon. We agree with the
conclusion of the Sandiganbayan in its assailed Resolution of March 18, 1992
that "the SMC Group has not justified its desire to retain the custody of
the 25.45 million sequestered shares of stock, which it had converted to
treasury shares despite sequestration, and to retain the dividends due thereon,
on its own merits."82
More unimpressive is petitioners'
submission that the "delivery of the shares to the PCGG may create legal
problems and may give an impression that these shares are outstanding and may
be sold and transferred, when under the law, all that can be done is for SMC to
reissue the shares pursuant to procedures mandated by the applicable
laws."83 Such fear is clearly unfounded and needs no elaborate
refutation.
RE:
ISSUE Of INTERVENTION OF COCOFED,
ET AL. IN CASE NO. 0102
We also affirm the resolution of
the Sandiganbayan allowing the intervention of COCOFED, et al. in Civil Case
No. 0102. It is the posture of the
petitioners that intervention is improper since Case No. 0102 has already been
withdrawn as of July 4, 1991. They
hinge the right to withdraw the Joint Petition to approve their Compromise Agreement
on section 1, Rule 17 of the Rules of Court.84 We do not agree.
First. The right of COCOFED, et al. to intervene in cases
involving these SMC shares has long been recognized by this Court. In Soriano III v. Yuzon,85 we ruled:
"x x x
The Philippine Coconut Producers Federation (COCOFED) also came
into the picture. A Manifestation dated
March 15, 1988 was filed in its behalf by its President, Ma. Clara
Lobregat. The Manifestation contained a
discussion of the laws passed (and the official action taken pursuant thereto)
establishing the coconut levy and providing for the management and utilization
of the funds thereby generated. It
advocated the thesis that the question of whether or not the investments of the
coconut levy fund constitute public property, essentially involves issues of
fact and law which should be resolved in the first instance by a trial court of
competent jurisdiction at a hearing on the merits, and the COCOFED should be
conceded the right to demonstrate at such a hearing that the coconut farmers,
through the so-called CIIF companies, and not Mr. Cojuangco, Jr. or any of his
companies, are the beneficial owners of the disputed block of SMC shares. Alternatively, the COCOFED prayed that it be
given the opportunity to substantiate the points it thus raises in G.R. No.
74910, or in Civil Case No. 13865 of the Regional Trial Court at Makati, or in
Civil Case No. 0033 of the Sandiganbayan entitled 'Republic v. Eduardo
Cojuangco, Jr.. et al.,' or in any other case which may hereafter be filed in
litigation of the issues."86
In said
case, we dismissed all the actions87 brought to us, directed the dismissal of cases
pending before the Regional Trial Courts and Securities and Exchange
Commission, and ruled that:
"This dismissal is without prejudice to the assertion and
ventilation before the Sandiganbayan by the parties of their respective claims
by such appropriate modes as are prescribed by law. x x x"88
Second. We again
emphasize that petitioners and the UCPB Group voluntarily submitted to and
invoked the jurisdiction of the Sandiganbayan when they filed their Joint
Petition for Approval of the Compromise Agreement and Amicable Settlement. The Sandiganbayan then immediately
exercised its jurisdiction as can be gleaned from the numerous hearings
conducted and orders it issued resolving various incidents of the case. Among others, it ordered persons and
entities with known legal interest on the subject shares to file their comments
on the Joint Petition. This order was not
seasonably challenged by the petitioners.
Pursuant thereto, COCOFED, et al., claiming beneficial interests on the
shares, intervened. Mr. Eduardo
Cojuangco, Jr. also manifested his intent to intervene. The right of these persons and entities
to have their claims heard and resolved cannot be defeated by the petitioners
by the simple act of withdrawing their Joint Petition for Approval of
Compromise Agreement and immediately implementing its provisions. To allow the unilateral withdrawal
is to allow the petitioners to make a plaything of the jurisdiction of the
Sandiganbayan, submit to it when it is in their favor and repudiate it when
it threatens to turn against their interest. Jurisdiction is vested by law and the all too familiar rule is
that once a court has assumed jurisdiction over a case, its jurisdiction shall
continue until the case is terminated.89
Third. Petitioners
cannot invoke section 1, Rule 17 of the Rules of Court which provides
"that a complaint may be dismissed by the plaintiff by filing a notice of
dismissal at any time before service of the answer or of a motion for summary
judgment." The provision contemplates a complaint where there is a plaintiff
and a defendant with real conflicting interests. The cases at bar, however, are
different. They started as a Joint
Petition for Approval of Compromise Agreement and Amicable Settlement. Known persons and entities claiming adverse
interests on the subject shares were not impleaded. In other words, no party that can assail the validity of the
Compromise Agreement that involves billions of pesos and substantial state
interests was impleaded in any capacity.
Yet, petitioners are aware that the subject shares of stock are
sequestered and their ownership is still under litigation in Case No.
0033. The attempt to bypass these
persons and entities with interests in the subject shares is hardly tenable and
the withdrawal of the petition and its immediate implementation when they
opposed it makes petitioners' posture doubly untenable.
There is another reason why
petitioners cannot rely on section 1, Rule 17 of the Rules of Court. This provision allows the plaintiff to
withdraw his complaint before defendant has answered it or filed a motion for
summary judgment. In fine, before the
defendant has pleaded to the complaint.
At that point, defendant has hardly been exposed to any kind of damage
or prejudice, hence, the plaintiff is unilaterally allowed to withdraw his complaint. In the cases at bar, before the petitioners and the UCPB Group
can file their Manifestation of Withdrawal of Joint Petition for Approval of
Compromise Agreement and Amicable Settlement, COCOFED, et al. have already
filed their Opposition in Intervention and Compulsory Counter-Petition and
Counterclaim for Damages. In the same
vein, the Republic, thru the OSG, has already filed its Opposition. These pleadings of COCOFED, et al. and the
Republic assail the legality of the Compromise Agreement. They can be deemed as answers to the Joint
Petition, hence, petitioners can no longer unilaterally withdraw their Joint
Petition.
Fourth. Petitioners
further contend that COCOFED, et al. cannot intervene because Case No. 0102 is
not an action or a suit and they did not implead any adverse party and set
forth no claims. Petitioners'
contention cannot merit the assent of the Court. Regardless of its nature as an action or suit, the fault of the
Joint Petition precisely lies in the attempt to bypass parties with legitimate
interests on the subject shares. The
existence of these parties is known to the petitioners yet they were not
impleaded. Their failure to be
impleaded is bad enough but worse still is petitioners' submission that since
they were not impleaded, ergo, they cannot
intervene. It is now a musty
principle of justice that a right cannot arise from a wrong. Moreover, the Sandiganbayan did not treat
the Joint Petition as an "action or suit" but as a mere incident of
Case No. 0033. In any event, section 1,
Rule 19 of the Rules of Court provides the rule on who can intervene, viz:
"A person who has a legal interest in the matter in litigation, or in the
success of either of the parties, or an interest against both, or is so
situated as to be adversely affected by a distribution or other disposition of
property in the custody of the court or of an officer thereof, may, with leave
of court, be allowed to intervene in the action." The legal interest of
COCOFED, et al. which justifies their intervention is extensively discussed in
the impugned resolution of the Sandiganbayan, viz:
"In all fairness, the motion to intervene filed by COCOFED, et al. must be granted for the following reasons:
1. The coconut planters and producers represented by COCOFED do have a legal interest in the matter of litigation and are so situated as to be adversely affected by the disposition of the sequestered shares of stock subject matter of the compromise agreement.
The rule on intervention (section 2, Rule 12 of the Rules of Court) states:
'Sec. 2. Intervention - A person may, before or during a trial be permitted by the court, in its discretion, to intervene in an action, if he has legal interest in the matter of litigation, or in the success of either of the parties, or an interest against both, or when he is so situated as to be adversely affected by a distribution or other disposition of property in the custody of the court or an officer thereof.'
x x x x x x x x x
It should be borne in mind that the real subject matter of this case is the coconut levy fund of which the SMC shares in question are claimed to be but a part. xxx
To start with, the coconut levy fund came from levies imposed upon the sale of copra or equivalent coconut product that was deducted from the price of copra which, as claimed by movants-farmers, would have gone to them. Thus, starting 1971, under the Coconut Investment Fund (CIF), a levy of P0.55 was imposed on the first domestic sale of every 100 kilograms of copra or equivalent product. In 1973, under the Coconut Consumers Stabilization Fund (CCSF), a levy of P15.00 on the first sale of every 100 kilograms of copra resecada or equivalent product was imposed. From the CCSF was established yet another fund, the Coconut Industry Development Fund (CIDF) whose initial capital of P100 million and regular allotment equivalent to P.20 per kilogram of copra resecada or its equivalent were contributed by the CCSF. (It is from this Coconut Industry Investment Fund (CIIF) that the so-called CIIF Companies were later established). From 1981, under the Coconut Industry Stabilization Fund which replaced the CCSF and CIDF, a levy of P50.00 for every 100 kilos of copra resecada or equivalent product delivered to exporters and copra users was collected and apportioned among the CIDF, COCOFED, PCA and the UCPB.
Through the years, part of the coconut levy fund was used and applied to various projects and invested or converted into different assets, properties and businesses. xxx
xxx [T]he coconut farmers and producers do have a legal interest in the SMC shares. That legal interest consists of their alleged beneficial ownership of the San Miguel shares, they being the 'registered owners and/or beneficial owners of all, or at least not less than fifty-one percent (51%), of the capital stock of the CIIF Companies' some of which wholly own the so-called CIIF Copra Trading Companies and the CIIF Holding Companies which are the registered stockholders of the SMC shares. (p. 3, COCOFED'S Omnibus Class Action xxx). Their claim is based on the specific provisions of Section 5, Article III, PD 1468, the pertinent portion of which states: 'Said fund (Coconut Consumers Stabilization Fund and the Coconut Industry Development Fund) and the disbursements thereof as herein authorized for the benefit of the coconut farmers shall be owned by them in their private capacities xxx.' This Presidential Decree has been assailed by the PCGG as a 'transgression of the basic limitation of the licit exercise of the state's taxing and police powers', but this is a legal question yet to be resolved.
It has been argued that COCOFED, et al. should not be allowed to intervene because they have no actual, material, direct or immediate interest in the subject matter. To be bound entirely by the form and nature of these assets as shares of stock subject to the special laws, rules and by-laws of corporations, is to adopt an overly strict, narrow and myopic approach. It has already been alleged that these shares constitute ill-gotten wealth derived from the coconut levy fund. The form into which part of the coco-levy fund has been converted is not crucial or decisive; otherwise, it would be so easy to defeat the recovery of ill-gotten wealth by simply converting those funds, assets and properties from one form to another and using legal technicalities to thwart all attempts to reach them. The clear intention of the law is to recover all assets and properties illegally acquired by former President Marcos, et al., in whatever form they may be, such as, to quote the exact wording of Executive Order No. 2, 'in the form of bank accounts, deposits, trust accounts, shares of stocks, buildings, shopping centers, condominium, mansions, residences, estates, and other kinds of real and personal properties in the Philippines and in various countries of the world.' (2nd Whereas Clause, Executive Order No. 2)
Moreover, at this stage of the proceedings, it has not yet been
established who the real owners of the SMC shares are, but if we bar movants
from the start, and if it should turn out in the end that they are the
beneficial owners and that the Compromise Agreement did in fact prejudice their
rights, then we shall have done them an irreparable injustice. Fairness and prudence dictate that -- at the
risk of the inconvenience of having one more group to be heard on the matter --
We exercise our discretion in favor of allowing them to intervene."90
Under the rules on intervention,
the allowance or disallowance of a motion to intervene is addressed to the
sound discretion of the court.91 Discretion is a faculty of a court or an official
by which he may decide a question either way, and still be right.92 The permissive tenor of the rules shows an intention
to give to the court the full measure of discretion in permitting or
disallowing the intervention. The
discretion of the court, once exercised, cannot be reviewed by certiorari nor controlled by mandamus save in instances where such discretion has been so exercised in an
arbitrary or capricious manner.93
Nor are we impressed by
petitioners' submission that COCOFED, et al. should pay a docket fee for their
counter-petition and counterclaim for damages. We note that it was the Sandiganbayan itself that ordered COCOFED
and the other defendants in Civil Case No. 0033 to give their comment to the
Joint Petition for Approval of Compromise Agreement, etc. In response to this order, COCOFED, et al.
filed their Opposition-in-Intervention and Compulsory Counter-Petition and
Counterclaim for Damages. COCOFED, et
al. alleged that the Compromise Agreement is illegal and its approval would
bring damages to themselves. In effect,
COCOFED, et al. alleged a compulsory counterclaim for which they need not pay
any docket fee.
Fifth. Petitioners
cannot insist on their right to have their Compromise Agreement approved on the
ground that it bears the imprimatur of the PCGG. To be sure, the consent of the PCGG is a factor that should be
considered in the approval or disapproval of the subject Compromise Agreement
but it is not the only factor.
In Republic vs. Sandiganbayan,94 this
Court had the occasion to categorically draw the distinctions between (i) the
Sandiganbayan's exclusive jurisdiction to determine the judicial question of
ownership over sequestered properties and (ii) the incidents of the exercise by
the PCGG of its purely administrative and executive functions as conservator of
sequestered properties, as follows:
"In other words, neither in Peña nor in any other case
did this Court ever say that orders of sequestration, seizure or take-over of
the PCGG or other acts done in the exercise of its so-called 'primary
administrative jurisdiction' are beyond judicial review, or beyond the
power of the courts to reverse or nullify.
It is true, of course, that those acts are entitled to much respect, the
findings and conclusions motivating and justifying them should be accorded
great weight, 'like the factual findings of the trial and appellate courts,'
and such findings and conclusions of the PCGG may not be superseded and
substituted by the judgment of the courts.
But obviously the principle does not and cannot sanction arbitrary,
whimsical, capricious or oppressive exercise of power and discretion on the
part of the PCGG, or its performance of acts without or in excess of its
authority and competence under the law.
And in accordance with applicable law, review of those acts, and
correction or invalidation thereof, when called for, can only be undertaken by
the Sandiganbayan, which has exclusive original jurisdiction over all cases
regarding 'the funds, moneys, assets and properties illegally acquired or
misappropriated by former President Ferdinand E. Marcos, Mrs. Imelda Romualdez
Marcos, their close relatives, subordinates, business associates, dummies,
agents or nominees.'"95 (emphasis supplied)
This ruling has stronger
application in the cases at bar considering that COCOFED, et al. have challenged the legality of the consent
given by PCGG to the Compromise Agreement on various grounds but especially in
light of the "arbitration fee" it received in the form of SMC shares
of substantial value. COCOFED, et al.'s
position that the Compromise Agreement is a sell out of its interest is also a
repudiation of the so called "business judgment" of UCPB which
petitioners insist should bind COCOFED, et al.
A final word. The cases at
bar involve shares of stock estimated to be worth more than P9 billion
now. These shares were sequestered in
1986 and the government filed Civil Case No. 0033 in 1987 to determine whether
they are part of the alleged ill-gotten wealth of former President Marcos and
his "cronies." We did not set aside the impugned resolutions of the
Sandiganbayan in the cases at bar for they constitute cautious moves to
preserve the character of the sequestered shares pending determination of their
true owners. Be that as it may, we note
that Civil Case No. 0033 has remained unresolved by the Sandiganbayan. The delay is no longer tolerable for it
locks in billions of pesos which could well rev-up our sputtering economy. Worse, it constitutes another embarassing
evidence of snail-paced justice, so long lamented but mostly by our lips
alone. The Sandiganbayan must not be
the burial ground of cases of far-reaching importance to our people. It is time for it to write finis to
Civil Case No. 0033.
IN VIEW WHEREOF, the petitions in G.R. Nos. 104637-38 and in G.R. No.
109797 are DISMISSED. No costs.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J., Melo, Vitug,
Kapunan, Mendoza, Purisima, Buena, Gonzaga-Reyes, and De Leon, Jr., JJ., concur.
Bellosillo, J., vote & approve the Compromise Agreement.
Pardo, J., Pls. see dissent.
Quisumbing, J., I join the dissent of J.
B. Pardo.
Panganiban, J., No part. As a former practising lawyer, have rendered an opinion on the
issues of this case.
Ynares-Santiago, J., on leave.
DISSENTING
PARDO, J.:
I regret to dissent from the
majority decision upholding the disapproval of the compromise agreement by the
Sandiganbayan.
The resolutions of the
Sandiganbayan, subject of the two (2) petitions for review on certiorari
before the Court would bar the implementation of a compromise agreement entered
into by the SMC Group and the UCPB Group regarding the thirty (30) million plus
shares of SMC in the name of the fourteen (14) holding companies of the CIIF
Group of Companies.
On April 27, 1990, the
Sandiganbayan directed the parties to Civil Case No. 00331
[Republic v.
Cojuangco, et al.] to fromalize a
statement of their interest on the subject matter of the compromise. A majority of the parties in Civil Case No.
0033 signified that they were not intervening.
Cojuangco and COCOFED, et al., were the only ones who claimed indirect
interest, as stockholders of SMC and UCPB.
Lobregat and others not being parties to Civil Case No. 0033, filed
their motion for leave to intervene and to admit their opposition and also
interposed a compulsory counterclaim for damages.
On June 3, 1991, the Sandiganbayan
issued a resolution that:
(a) The sequestered character of the SMC shares subject of the compromise, is independent of the transaction involving the contracting parties;
(b) The reversions contemplated are without prejudice to sequestration;
(c) The PCGG has not interposed any objection to the contractual resolution of the problems confronting the SMC and the UCPB groups.
Pursuant to June 3, 1991
Sandiganbayan resolution, the SMC Group and the UCPB Group implemented the
compromise agreement. They withdrew the
joint petition for approval of the compromise, and the PCGG gave its express
conformity to the withdrawal.
In First Philippines, the Court
held that, “Under the Civil Code, the court may reject a compromise only if it
is covered by the prohibition under Art. 2035, Civil Code. No compromise upon the following question
shall be valid: 1. The civil status of
persons; 2. The validity of a marriage or legal separation; 3. Any ground for
legal separation; 4. Future support; 5. The jurisdiction of courts; 6. Future
legitime.”
Article 2036, Civil Code provides
that “a compromise comprises only objects which are definitely stated therein,
or which by necessary implication from its terms should be deemed to have been
included in the same. A general
renunciation of rights is understood to refer only to those that are connected
with the dispute which is the subject of the compromise, or if it is, in
general, contrary to “law, morals, good customs, public order or public
policy.”2 [First Philippine Holdings Corp. v.
Sandiganbayan, 202 SCRA 212, 219-220 [1991].]
Compromises, being consensual
contracts, are perfected upon the meeting of minds of the parties. Judicial approval is not required for its
perfection.3 Sanches v. Court of Appeals,
279 SCRA 647 [1997].]
In Republic of the Philippines v.
Sandiganbayan,4
[173 SCRA 729
[1989].] “this Court categorically stated
that amicable settlements and compromises are not allowed but actually
encouraged in civil cases. In Benedicto
v. Board of Administrators of Television Stations RPN, BBC and IBC,5 [207 SCRA 659 [1992].]
the Court ruled that the authority of the PCGG to validly enter into compromise
agreements for the purpose of avoiding litigation or putting an end to one
already commenced was indisputable. The
Court took cognizance of the fact that the compromise agreement which is now
the subject of the present petition was pending before the Sandiganbayan for
determination and approval and, therefore, dismissed the petition directed
against the agreement’s implementation and enforcement.”
The compromise is merely a
contractual resolution of disputes since all that the compromise resolves and
lays to rest are the rights and obligations of the seller (UCPB) and the buyer
(SMC) under the March 1986 agreement (executed prior to the
sequestration). Hence, Case No. 102
does not involve COCOFED, et al.
Advantages of the approval of the
compromise agreement.
On the part of SMC, in exchange
for the P500 million down payment, it will receive 26,450,000 million shares to
be treated as treasury shares. If
25,450,000 shares will be dispersed according to a plan approved by the PCGG,
the proceeds will enable SMC to be reimbursed for the P500 million investment
costs and be able to use such proceeds for its expansion program.
On the part of the UCPB group, the
CIIF companies will be entitled to the dividends which as of 1993 amounted to
P692,343,458.57, more than enough to pay out their debts and thus prevent its
collapse an foreclosure.
On the part of the PCGG, in the
event that the assets involved are adjudged ill-gotten, the government will be
the owner of UCPB and the CIIF companies and their assets. So it is to the interest of the government
that said assets be preserved. The
compromise agreement puts an end to the claim of the SMC group to the
sequestered shares. The Government will
receive 5,500,000 shares in trust for the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program
(CARP).
We are concerned with the SMC
shares paid for with the P500 million first installment. The proceeds of the sale of the five (5)
million shares converted to treasury shares are with the UCPB, a sequestered
company. Thus, the interest of the
government remains protected. In
Liwayway Publishing, Inc. v. PCGG,6
[160 SCRA 716
[1998].] we held “rights of the parties
and of the
government, are adequately protected by the acceptance of a cash deposit for
the shares in the name of Eduardo Cojuangco, Jr.”
We can not take as facts what was
related in the book of Senator Jovito R. Salonga that the money used to
purchase the disputed shares would come from the sale by a San Miguel
subsidiary of a profitable Hong Kong company to Anheuser Busch for HK $1 or
roughly P2.6 billion. This assertion
was based on “reliable accounts” not on indubitable facts. In fact, in SMC v. Khan,7 [176 SCRA 447, 454 [1989].] it was alleged through the petition filed by Atty.
Eduardo de los Angeles that, on April 1, 1986 Soriano, Kahn and Roxas, as
directors of Neptunia Corporation, Ltd., had met and passed a resolution authorizing
the company to borrow up to $26,500,000.00 from the Hongkong Shanghai Banking
Corporation, HongKong, to enable the Soriano family to initiate steps and sign
an agreement for the purchase of some 33,133,266 shares of San Miguel
Corporation. The loan of $26,500,000.00
was obtained on the same day, the loan agreement was signed for Neptunia by
Ralph Karr and Carl Ottiger.
Consequently, there is no basis
for ruling that the money involved in the compromise agreement would come from
an illegal source. The Sandiganbayan
exceeded its jurisdiction and acted with grave abuse of discretion when it
required SMC to turn over treasury shares to the Sandiganbayan, and worse, to
pay dividends on treasury shares. By
law, treasury shares do not earn dividends.8 [Com. of Internal Revenue vs.
Manning, 66 SCRA 14 [1975].]
IN VIEW WHEREOF, I vote to SET ASIDE the Sandiganbayan
resolutions and to APPROVE the compromise agreement.
[1] Composed of fourteen
companies, namely: Soriano Shares,
Inc.; ASC Investors Inc.; Roxas Shares, Inc.; ARC Investors, Inc.; APHOLDINGS,
Inc.; TODA Holdings, Inc.; Fernandez Holdings, Inc.; San Miguel Officers Corps,
Inc.; Te Deum Resources, Inc.; ANGLO Ventures, Inc.; First Meridian
Development, Inc.; Rock Steel Resources, Inc.; Randy Allied Ventures, Inc. and
Valhalla Properties Limited, Inc.
[2] Annex "A" of
Petition in G.R. No. 104637-38; Rollo (Vol. I), pp. 34-50.
[3] See also Salonga,
Presidential Plunder, The Quest for the Marcos Ill-Gotten Wealth, pp. 100-101.
[4] Docketed as Civil Case No.
13865.
[5] Entitled "Soriano III,
et al. vs. Hon. Manuel Yuzon, et al." and docketed as
G.R. No. 74910.
[6] Soriano III vs.
Yuzon, 164 SCRA 226 (1988).
[7] Annex "F" of
Petition in G.R. No. 104637-38; Rollo (Vol. I), pp. 90-99.
[8] Id., pp. 93-94.
[9] Joint Manifestation for
Implementation of Compromise Agreement and Amicable Settlement and of
Withdrawal of Petition, Annex “L” of Petition in G.R. No. 104637-38, pp. 2-3; Rollo
(Vol. I), pp. 192-193.
[10] Annex "G", ibid.;
Rollo (Vol. I), pp. 100-117.
[11] Annex "I" of
Petition in G.R. No. 109797; Rollo, p. 95.
[12] Annex "5" of COCOFED, et al.'s Supplemental
Comment in G.R. No. 109797; Rollo, pp. 390-435.
[13] Id., pp. 26-28; Rollo,
pp. 415-417.
[14] Id., pp. 42-44; Rollo,
pp. 431-433.
[15] Annex "O" of
Petition in G.R. No. 109797; Rollo, pp. 144-146.
[16] Referring to Maria Clara L.
Lobregat, Bienvenido Marquez, Jose R. Eleazar, Jr., Domingo Espina, Jose Gomez,
Celestino Sabate, Manuel del Rosario, Jose Martinez, Jr., Jose Reynaldo Morente
and Eladio Chatto.
[17] Annex "Q" of
Petition in G.R. No. 109797; Rollo, pp. 149-164.
[18] Annex "H" in G.R.
No. 104637-38; Rollo (Vol. I), pp. 118-119.
[19] Annex "H-1", id.,
pp. 120-136.
[20] Supra note 18.
[21] Supra note 19, pp.
129-131.
[22] Annex "H-2", id.,
pp. 137-139.
[23] Annex "J-1", id.,
pp. 158-189.
[24] Annex "T" of Petition in G.R. No. 109797; Rollo, p.
225.
[25] Ibid.
[26] Annex "6" of COCOFED,
et al.'s Memorandum; Rollo, G.R. No. 104637-38 (Vol. II), pp.
781-797.
[27] Annex "U" of
Petition in G.R. No. 109797; Rollo, p. 226.
[28] Annex "7" of
COCOFED, et al.'s Memorandum; Rollo, G.R. No. 104637-38 (Vol.
II), pp. 798-801.
[29] Annex "8", ibid.;
Rollo (Vol. II), pp. 802-803.
31 Annex "9", ibid.;
Rollo (Vol. II), p. 804-807.
31 Annex "K" of
Petition in G.R. No. 104637-38; Rollo (Vol. I), p. 190.
32 Annex "L", id.,
pp. 191-193.
33 Id., pp. 2-3.
34 Annex "M", id.,
pp. 194-195.
35 Cojuangco, Jr. filed his
Motion to Nullify Implementation of "Compromise Agreement and Amicable
Settlement" dated March 20 and 22, 1991 with Urgent Prayer for Temporary
Restraining Order, Annex "N", id., pp. 196-201; COCOFED, et
al. filed their Class Action Manifestation and Motion, Annex
"N-1", id., pp. 204-212.
36 Annex "O", id.,
p. 213.
37 Annex "10"
of COCOFED, et al.'s Memorandum;
Rollo, G.R. No. 104637-38 (Vol . II), pp. 808-809.
38 Annex "P" of
Petition in G.R. No. 104637-38; Rollo (Vol. I), pp. 214-215.
39 Annex "11" of
COCOFED, et al.'s Memorandum; Rollo (Vol. II), pp. 810-813.
40 Annex "Q" of
Petition in G.R. No. 104637-38; Rollo (Vol. I), pp. 216-218.
41 Annex "T", id.,
p. 231.
42 Annex "12" of
COCOFED, et al.'s Memorandum; Rollo, G.R. No. 104637-38 (Vol.
II), pp. 949-953.
43 Annex "R" of
Petition in G.R. No. 104637-38; Rollo (Vol. I), pp. 219-220.
44 Annex "V", id.,
pp. 257-262.
45 Annex "U", id.,
p. 232-237.
46 Annex "A" of Petition
in G. R. No. 109797; Rollo, pp. 25-38.
47 Annex "B" , ibid.;
Rollo, pp. 39-45.
48 Annex "W" of
Petition in G.R. No. 104637-38; Rollo (Vol. I), pp. 266-270.
49 Annex "Y", ibid.;
Rollo (Vol. I), pp. 291-314.
50 Annex "AA" of
Petition in G.R. No. 109797; Rollo, pp. 242-247.
51 Annex "C" of
Petition in G.R. No. 109797; Rollo, p. 46.
52 Reiterating Sandiganbayan
Resolution dated July 23, 1991 and denying petitioners' Manifestation and
Motion for Reconsideration.
53 Annex "W" of
Petition in G.R. No. 104637-38; Rollo (Vol. I), pp. 266-270.
54 The Resolution denied
petitioners’ Motion for Reconsideration.
55 Annex "Y" of
Petition in G.R. No. 104637-38; Rollo (Vol. I), pp. 291-314.
56 Annex "A" of
Petition in G.R. No. 109797; Rollo, pp. 25-38.
57 Annex "B", ibid.;
Rollo, pp. 39-45.
58 Annex "C", ibid.,
Rollo, p. 46.
59 Petition in G.R. No.
104637-38, p. 12; Rollo (Vol. I), p. 17.
60 Petition in G.R. No.
109797, pp. 10-11; Rollo, pp. 11-12.
61 COCOFED, et al.'s
Comment in G.R. No. 104637-38, pp. 25-26; Rollo (Vol. I), pp. 384-385.
62 COCOFED, et al.'s
Comment in G.R. No. 109797, pp. 10-11; Rollo, pp. 275-276.
63 Toyota Autoparts, Phil.,
Inc. vs. Director of Bureau of Labor Relations of the Department of
Labor and Employment, 304 SCRA 95 (1999).
64 Respondent COCOFED
estimates the value of the shares as P9.4 billion. See Consolidated
Memorandum, p. 46; Rollo
(Vol. II) in G.R. No. 104637-38, p. 762.
65 Annex “F” of Petition in GR No. 104637-38, p. 7; Rollo
(Vol. I), p. 96.
66 Annex "H-1"
of Petition in G.R. No. 104637-38, pp.
11-12; Rollo (Vol. I), pp. 130-131.
67 Annex "9" of COCOFED, et al.'s Memorandum in G.R.
No. 104637-38; Rollo (Vol. II), pp. 804-807.
68 Id., p. 804.
69 150 SCRA 181 (1987).
70 Id., pp. 208-209.
71 Resolution dated July 5,
1991, Annex "O" of Petition
in G.R. No. 104637-38; Rollo (Vol. I), p. 213.
72 Sandiganbayan Resolution
dated March 18, 1992, pp. 19-20; Annex "Y" of Petition in G.R. No.
104637-38; Rollo (Vol. I), pp. 310-311.
73 [66
SCRA 14 (1975).
74 Id., pp. 23-24.
75 Broken down as 3,858,831
class "A" shares and 1,641,169 class "B" shares.
76 See COCOFED, et al.'s
Consolidated Memorandum, p. 47; Rollo (Vol. II) in G.R. No. 104637-38,
p. 763.
77 Id., p. 48. It considered the shares' stock market value
and a premium of 3.48 times the composite price.
78 202 SCRA 212 (1991).
79 SMC's Memorandum, pp.
29-30; Rollo (Vol. II) in G.R. No. 104637-38, pp. 1026-1027.
80 Petition in G.R. No.
104637-38, p. 23; Rollo (Vol. I), p. 28.
81 Annex "Y" of
Petition in G.R. No. 104637-38, pp. 13-16; Rollo (Vol. I), pp. 304-307.
82 Id., p. 14; Rollo
(Vol. I), p. 305.
83 Petition in G.R. No.
104637-38, p. 17; Rollo (Vol. I), p. 22.
84 It states that "an
action may be dismissed by the plaintiff without order of court by filing a
notice of dismissal at any time before service of the answer or of a motion for
summary judgment x x x."
85 Supra note 6.
86 Id., pp. 239-240.
87 G.R. Nos. L-74910, 75075,
75094, 76397, 79459 and 79520.
88 Soriano III vs. Yuzon, supra at 242.
89 Guimoc v. Rosales,
201 SCRA 468 (1991).
90 Resolution dated September
30, 1991, Annex "A" of Petition in G.R. No. 109797, pp. 5-7, 9-12; Rollo,
pp. 29-31, 33-36.
91 Section 2 (b), Rule 12 of
the Rules of Court.
92 Toyota Autoparts, Phil.,
Inc. vs. Director of Bureau of Labor Relations of the Department of
Labor and Employment, 304 SCRA 95 (1999).
93 Big Country Ranch Corp. vs.
Court of Appeals, 227 SCRA 161 (1993).
94 206 SCRA 506 (1992).
95 Id., p. 517.